Two newly elected Native American women will provide a crucial voice against repression in US Congress

The US has just elected two Native American women to Congress for the very first time. And considering that the brutal treatment of North America’s indigenous population continues to this day, this breakthrough is of huge symbolic importance.

Native American women make history

Democrat Deb Haaland, who is a member of the Laguna Pueblo tribe, won a seat in New Mexico. Sharice Davids, also a Democrat and a member of the Ho-Chunk nation, defeated an incumbent Republican in Kansas.

Haaland in particular had campaigned on a clearly progressive platform, expressing commitment to:

Start your day with The Canary News Digest

Fresh and fearless; get excellent independent journalism from The Canary, delivered straight to your inbox every morning.

Email Address

First name

Last name

Mobile number (optional)

Website

fighting for Medicare for all, moving to 100% renewable energy, taking big money out of politics, women’s equality, permanent solution for our dreamers, and taking on the NRA!

Haaland and Davids are the first Native women elected to Congress in US history. To put that in perspective, consider that – of the over 10,000 people that have served in Congress since its first meeting in 1789 – none of them have been Native American women. Indeed, Native Americans have faced political marginalisation in the US ever since its founding in 1776.

Centuries of oppression

America’s indigenous population has faced many centuries of oppression, discrimination, and marginalization. In fact, the word genocide is totally appropriate. Historians have estimated that the indigenous population upon European contact may have been as high as 18 million, and it had sunk to under 250,000 by 1890.

Native Americans have also experienced extensive ethnic cleansing. During the ‘Trail of Tears’ in the 1830s, the US government and settler colonialistspushed many Native American tribes to the west of the Mississippi River. Since then, Washington has violated countless treaties, especially when doing so suits powerful interests.

For example, corporations have pushed Native Americans off their land to make way for resource extraction. They have also gone into reservations and extracted resources with little thought for the consequences to those living there.

Uranium and coal mining on the Navajo Nation and Hopi Reservation, for instance, has led to a decades-long public health crisis for members of those tribes.

Contemporary issues

Today, the nearby San Carlos Apache Nation in Arizona is resisting efforts to sell some of its land to foreign mining conglomerates.

Other issues currently facing Native American communities include poverty, unemployment, poor mental and physical health, and lack of access to basic services.

On the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, for example, life expectancy is 48 years and 52 years for men and women respectively – the second lowest in the Western Hemisphere after Haiti. Unemployment stands at at least 80%, while the median income stands at around $4,000 per year. And tuberculosis and diabetes levels are eight times the national average.

On the Navajo Reservation, meanwhile, over 40% of residents lack access to running water or basic restroom facilities.

– If you’re a US resident, you can also join and participate in the activities of the Democratic Socialists of America.

– The Canary actively invites its readers to question everything they read – so please follow the links we reference, and always search for more information if unsure. But if you believe in the importance of independent, grassroots media in the fight against corporate propaganda, please consider supporting us.

Since you're here ...

We know you don't need a lecture. You wouldn't be here if you didn't care.
Now, more than ever, we need your help to challenge the rightwing press and hold power to account. Please help us survive and thrive.

This site

This website uses cookies

We, and our partners, set cookies and collect information from your browser to provide you with website content, deliver relevant advertising and understand web audiences. See our privacy policy to learn more about how we manage your data and your rights. See our cookie consent policy to understand how we use cookies and tracking technology. To agree to our use of cookies, click "Accept".